Len Rum
Well-Known Member
Mustn't grumble.it’s done now we are leaving , people need to just get on with it.
Mustn't grumble.it’s done now we are leaving , people need to just get on with it.
With respect - I have see you make this mistake a few times.
Not every such post is aimed at you personally and the fact that you may have shown the character to hold the view that ".....accept the public wishes to leave and that is what we should do." does not mean that a lot of others have not and it will be them, rather than you, that the point is aimed at.
Indeed - otherwise you are also making a generalisation - assuming that your personal stance covers all Remain voters when it clearly doesn't. A lot of Remainers, including some on here have/are indeed reacting as described in @Ardwick Green Blue post.
Remainers are gutted as they bet the house on overturning the Leave vote and ensuring that the UK stayed in the EU. They had the option of voting for May's soft Brexit deal, which became even softer when she entered into negotiations with Labour. However they calculated they could get far more than that and voted it down.
As Jim Bowen used to say..'This is what you could have won'...
Never mind, it was only the speed boat..
Utterly incorrect and a generalisation.
I’m a remain voter and would vote remain every single time of asking but I accept the public wishes to leave and that is what we should do.
I kinda liked their lazier approach; "They didn't know what they were voting for!"After losing every single argument since the referendum result, ie; general elections won by a leave supporting party,
the opposition declaring their intention to honour the referendum result also, then seeing the jaw dropping success of
the BXP in the MEP elections, then a new PM promises an election to break the deadlock on Brexit created by Parliament,
and standing, and shouting, screaming 'GET BREXIT DONE!' holding said election and storming it with a landslide,
you still come out with this utter nonsense.
No doubt what follows will be a frantic exercise in adding up everyone in the population, including babies, prisoners,
foreigners and the insane, umpteen millions kicking the bucket since the vote, and an absolute belief that no remainer whatsoever
has accepted the result at all, and this facile, futile argument will still stagger on.
Still waiting for an explanation of what this "ultra soft Brexit" was. Some real revisionism going on already - by the winners! As for "out of touch" you all know you'd have lost a second referendum.
Nice to know I'm not alone in my naivety.
As for the general nonsense that there was ever a soft Brexit (let alone an "ultra soft Brexit") to be had from May, I'm not sure how anyone thinks that. Even if it was offered to Labour she'd never have got it past her own party.
Even on the indicative votes for staying in a customs union and for a confirmatory referendum it was Labour rebels helping to vote those down. (Most LibDems voted against the customs union, so blame them for not compromising - and the SNP who abstained.)
I guess you're all trying to prove by this revisionist nonsense that history is written by the winners.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/amp/uk-politics-47779783
I was specifically referencing Remain MPs & not all Remainers. Clearly Johnson won a lot of Conservative Remain votes and probably a fair few from previously Labour voters.
If you are interested what Remain Ultras think of it all go on the Guardian comments :)
I think there's a few of us leave advocates who would compromise on retaining some aspects of access to the Single Market... it's when people say we should keep both that pisses a lot of us off. ;)I’ve literally just told you.
Remaining in the Customs Union or Single Market or both is an ultra soft, soft, mega soft, pretty soft, whatever-you-want-to-call-it soft Brexit
Yet every opinion poll right till the day of the election had Remain ahead. Including Labour, Remainy parties got more votes in the election. To leave the EU is not what most people want. That's why Leavers wanted to avoid another referendum. You all know that.After losing every single argument since the referendum result, ie; general elections won by a leave supporting party,
the opposition declaring their intention to honour the referendum result also, then seeing the jaw dropping success of
the BXP in the MEP elections, then a new PM promises an election to break the deadlock on Brexit created by Parliament,
and standing, and shouting, screaming 'GET BREXIT DONE!' holding said election and storming it with a landslide,
you still come out with this utter nonsense.
No doubt what follows will be a frantic exercise in adding up everyone in the population, including babies, prisoners,
foreigners and the insane, umpteen millions kicking the bucket since the vote, and an absolute belief that no remainer whatsoever
has accepted the result at all, and this facile, futile argument will still stagger on.
And when was that on offer from the Tories? (Other than during the referendum campaign?)I’ve literally just told you.
Remaining in the Customs Union or Single Market or both is an ultra soft, soft, mega soft, pretty soft, whatever-you-want-to-call-it soft Brexit
Says the only Leaver on here who did want an ultra soft Brexit by keeping us in the EEA, a free trade zone from Iceland to the Russian border (as advocated by Gove and the official Leave campaign of which Johnson was part).I think there's a few of us leave advocates who would compromise on retaining some aspects of access to the Single Market... it's when people say we should keep both that pisses a lot of us off. ;)
The Customs Union is the big one; we stay in the CU and we haven't left the EU.
There was never any reason for a second referendum beyond the fact some folk didn't like the result of the 2016 one. Most propositions for another referendum deliberately aimed to split the leave votes between a deal or no Deal option so as to get remain over the line. Basically a form of electoral fraud.Yet every opinion poll right till the day of the election had Remain ahead. Including Labour, Remainy parties got more votes in the election. To leave the EU is not what most people want. That's why Leavers wanted to avoid another referendum. You all know that.
There was never any reason for a second referendum beyond the fact some folk didn't like the result of the 2016 one. Most propositions for another referendum deliberately aimed to split the leave votes between a deal or no Deal option so as to get remain over the line. Basically a form of electoral fraud.
After losing every single argument since the referendum result, ie; general elections won by a leave supporting party,
the opposition declaring their intention to honour the referendum result also, then seeing the jaw dropping success of
the BXP in the MEP elections, then a new PM promises an election to break the deadlock on Brexit created by Parliament,
and standing, and shouting, screaming 'GET BREXIT DONE!' holding said election and storming it with a landslide,
you still come out with this utter nonsense.
No doubt what follows will be a frantic exercise in adding up everyone in the population, including babies, prisoners,
foreigners and the insane, umpteen millions kicking the bucket since the vote, and an absolute belief that no remainer whatsoever
has accepted the result at all, and this facile, futile argument will still stagger on.
That's just admitting that people voted Leave but not for leaving without a deal (unless you can cite anyone in the leave campaign who told voters we might leave without a deal). So the first referendum was a fraud.There was never any reason for a second referendum beyond the fact some folk didn't like the result of the 2016 one. Most propositions for another referendum deliberately aimed to split the leave votes between a deal or no Deal option so as to get remain over the line. Basically a form of electoral fraud.
We don't all know that at all.Yet every opinion poll right till the day of the election had Remain ahead. Including Labour, Remainy parties got more votes in the election. To leave the EU is not what most people want. That's why Leavers wanted to avoid another referendum. You all know that.
That's just admitting that people voted Leave but not for leaving without a deal (unless you can cite anyone in the leave campaign who told voters we might leave without a deal). So the first referendum was a fraud.
We don't all know that at all.
I was of the opinion that were there to have been a second referendum, that Remain would win. But I thought that about the first one. Most people did and we were wrong, weren't we.
Anyway, why are we even having this discussion??? Shall we debate the reasons for John Major's election defeat in 1997, or other such historical irrelevances? Brexit is now happening and we all need to start focusing on positives and looking forward. I see little point in getting into a huddle and convincing ourselves endlessly how we shouldn't have voted how we did and how terrible it's going to be. We just have to make the best of it.
I’m with you until the ‘focus on the positives’ bit. I’m struggling with that as outside of ‘getting Brexit done’ and ‘unleashing’ the UKs potential, the Government don’t seem to be talking about the positives, apart from a points based imagination system of course but even that (let’s pretend it’s a positive) is very short on detail
The only way to unite the country is to explain to people the length and breadth of the country, from all background and demographics how we are likely to benefit in the short, medium and long term
Nice selective use of my post - lolStill waiting for an explanation of what this "ultra soft Brexit" was. Some real revisionism going on already - by the winners! As for "out of touch" you all know you'd have lost a second referendum.
Nice to know I'm not alone in my naivety.
As for the general nonsense that there was ever a soft Brexit (let alone an "ultra soft Brexit") to be had from May, I'm not sure how anyone thinks that. Even if it was offered to Labour she'd never have got it past her own party.
Even on the indicative votes for staying in a customs union and for a confirmatory referendum it was Labour rebels helping to vote those down. (Most LibDems voted against the customs union, so blame them for not compromising - and the SNP who abstained.)
I guess you're all trying to prove by this revisionist nonsense that history is written by the winners.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/amp/uk-politics-47779783